Some of the things he mentioned around natural hormone production made a lot of sense to me.

I have naturally low testosterone, but it has never seemed to hinder me in strength training, whereas I know people who have typical signs of high test (baldness, body hair, high sex drive, etc) who really struggle

In the interview, Poliquin mentions this and claims that he has trained many athletes in both camps and says that DHEA is of a high importance than test levels.

I've started using margarine with added sterols (tastes amazing in my smoothie!) as an initial test, but not sure whether the sterols are the same kind. You can buy it in supplement form, but it's pretty expensive.

Lifter, runner and founder of nuutrii, a free recipe analyses tool for athletes.

I have naturally low testosterone, but it has never seemed to hinder me in strength training

Do you think is due to the endurance training you do? low testosterone in endurance athletes, called exercise-hypogonadal male condition (EHMC)

I’d say it might not feel like you’ve been hindered especialy if you can continue to progress but you probably have. Your strength gains would be higher or in a shorter time frame or both with higher test levels.

The endurance training has a lot to do with it, but that's decreased over the last couple of years.

I think I would definitely make better progress with higher T, but I doubt I would ever go down the TRT route unless absolutely required for health reasons. Competing for me is about enjoyment and personal fulfilment.

Lifter, runner and founder of nuutrii, a free recipe analyses tool for athletes.